Her Campus Logo Her Campus Logo
Mary Kay Products
Mary Kay Products
Hampton U | Wellness > Mental Health

When Self Care Becomes Another Assignment: How Social Media Took Over Self-Care

Jayona Monique Dorsey Student Contributor, Hampton University
This article is written by a student writer from the Her Campus at Hampton U chapter and does not reflect the views of Her Campus.

Lately, everything feels like a chore. After classes, work, deadlines, and just existing in your 20s, you’re still expected to pour into yourself. But even that starts to feel like another task.

Even the things I used to enjoy don’t always feel light anymore. They come with pressure—like I’m always behind on something I was supposed to be doing for myself.

There’s this quiet exhaustion that comes from always trying to keep up, not just with life, but with yourself. Like you’re supposed to be healing, growing, glowing, and becoming all at once. And if you’re not actively doing that in a visible, intentional way, it can feel like you’re falling behind in your own life.

As a content creator, I’ve noticed how quickly rest turns into production. A simple walk outside becomes content. A skincare night turns into a 10-step aesthetic routine with lighting, angles, and editing. Even journaling starts to feel like it needs to be deep, pretty, or shareable. Self-care stops being private and starts feeling like something to perform, even when no one is asking for it.

And that’s where it gets tricky. It’s not just that we’re documenting our lives—we’re also starting to experience them through that lens. You’re not just resting anymore, you’re thinking about how it looks. You’re not just taking care of yourself, you’re wondering how it would translate online. Somewhere in that shift, the softness starts to feel less natural and a little more edited.

What used to be simple—resting, doing nothing, lighting a candle, taking a nap without guilt—now feels like it needs a budget and a blueprint. Self-care has been turned into expensive routines, aesthetic reset days, and products that feel out of reach.

There’s always something new you’re told you need in order to “take care of yourself properly,” and it adds up fast, emotionally and financially.

And the truth is, most people don’t have a self-care budget. Life is already expensive. Rent, food, school, transportation—it’s a lot before you even get to yourself. So now healing can start to feel like another bill you’re expected to keep up with. Another thing you’re supposed to invest in, even when you’re already stretched thin.

That pressure can make it feel like you’re doing something wrong if your care doesn’t look like what you see online. If your version of rest is just sleeping in. If your “reset day” is staying in bed and doing nothing. If your self-care doesn’t come with candles, matching sets, or a curated playlist. But none of that makes it less valid.

The truth is, self-care doesn’t have to look like that. It can be small and unglamorous and still matter.

Drinking water before coffee. Sitting in silence for a few minutes without filling it with noise. Going for a walk without filming it or turning it into a story. Saying no without over-explaining. Taking a shower and letting that be enough for the day. Choosing rest without needing to justify it or make it aesthetic.

And it’s not all bad. Social media has made mental health conversations more visible and less isolating, and that matters more than we realize. It has given language to things people used to struggle through alone. It has made people feel seen. But it has also blurred the line between care and performance in ways we’re still learning how to navigate.

Caring for yourself doesn’t have to be aesthetic to be real. It doesn’t have to be posted to count. And it definitely doesn’t have to be perfect to be enough.

Self-care is not supposed to feel like another assignment. It’s supposed to meet you where you are—even on the days where all you can do is get through it.

Jayona Monique is a third-year Strategic Communications major at Hampton University, with a minor in Marketing and a concentration in Public Relations. She serves as PR & Marketing Co-Chair for Her Campus at Hampton University and is the Spring 2026 Wellness Editorial Intern here at Her Campus Media.

A reflective wellness and sisterhood writer, Jayona’s work lives at the intersection of personal storytelling and cultural commentary. She writes like a big sister in the middle of becoming; honest, reflective, and always thinking a little deeper. Her voice blends soft life wellness with a grounded, “we’re figuring this out together” perspective.

Through her writing, she explores friendship, independence, and the identity shifts that come with navigating your early 20s, centering Black womanhood and intentional representation. Whether she’s unpacking burnout, living alone for the first time, or friendship breakups, Jayona moves beyond simply telling the story—she processes it, offering reflections that connect personal experiences to broader cultural conversations.

Originally from Baltimore, Maryland, she is passionate about storytelling and creative direction, writing stories that don’t just reflect the moment—but help make sense of it.